Author

admin

Browsing

President Donald Trump is hosting an event at the White House Wednesday to tout how ‘Clean Beautiful Coal,’ he says, is America’s most reliable and affordable energy source.

The president will be joined by Energy Secretary Chris Wright, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin and Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum for Wednesday’s event, which is set to begin at 4:00 p.m. Eastern Standard Time in the White House’s East Room.

The White House told Fox News Digital Tuesday that a number of governors and members of Congress were also invited to attend the event. 

‘Beautiful, clean coal is critical to ensuring American families and businesses have the energy they need, while simultaneously driving down electricity costs across the country,’ White House spokeswoman Taylor Rogers told Fox News Digital. ‘President Trump’s commonsense approach is unleashing America’s most reliable and affordable energy source, saving thousands of good-paying jobs, and turning the page on Joe Biden’s energy crisis.’ 

The event is set to highlight how coal is a ‘reliable and affordable energy source that keeps the lights on during times of peak demand,’ the White House said.

The president is set to sign the ‘Strengthen the United States National Defense with America’s Beautiful Clean Coal Power Generation Fleet’ executive order Wednesday during the event — a new initiative for the Department of War to purchase electricity from coal-powered plants.

That order directs Secretary of War Pete Hegseth to enter into power purchasing agreements with coal-fired power plants to ensure that the Department of War has reliable power to strengthen the U.S. grid.

Also during the event, the president will announce that the Department of Energy will award funds to five coal plants to recommission and upgrade facilities in West Virginia, Ohio, North Carolina and Kentucky. 

A White House official told Fox News Digital that will be the first of ‘many more announcements’ related to awarding funds to coal plants across the nation.

‘Since the President has returned to office his relentless support for the coal industry has been felt,’ a White House official told Fox News Digital. ‘Coal production is up, new mines have been (opened), existing mines are being expanded, coal plants are continuing to run, and NEDC is working with a few companies to help build new coal generation units — which hasn’t happened since 2013.’

The official pointed to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, which logged that during the first two quarters of 2025, an additional 12.2 million tons of coal were produced than in the first two quarters of 2024, representing a 5% increase year-over-year.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt previewed the event, saying the president ‘will discuss how Clean Beautiful Coal is not only keeping the lights on but also driving down the cost of electricity across our country.’

Also during the event, the Washington Coal Club is set to name Trump the ‘Undisputed Champion of Coal.’

The event comes after the Trump administration, in January, reinstated the National Coal Council, comprised of dozens of stakeholders from energy firms, utilities, governmental and tribal interests, saying that no industry affects Americans’ lives more.

The council is now chaired by Peabody Energy CEO Jim Grech and Core Natural Resources Chairman Jimmy Brock. The council cut its was reinstated four years after then-President Joe Biden dissolved the decades-old consortium.

It also comes after the Energy Department announced $625 million would be put toward reinvigorating the U.S. coal industry in response to Trump’s executive order calling for such, and another directive to ‘strengthen the reliability and security of the U.S. energy grid.’

Wright’s office said in a release that the administration has saved more than 15GW of coal-powered electricity, in part through relaunching the council.

In July 2025, a DOE analysis found that the loss of coal-fired power plants would make grid reliability unsustainable, while also finding that 100GW more peak-hour supply is needed by 2030.

Fox News’ Charles Creitz contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Israel formally joined the Board of Peace on Wednesday ahead of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s meeting with President Donald Trump at the White House.

Netanyahu signed the document in the presence of Secretary of State Marco Rubio shortly before his scheduled talk with Trump, marking a diplomatic step as the two leaders prepare to discuss regional security and ongoing conflict in the Middle East.

The prime minister said on X that while the talks would cover several issues, including Gaza, they would ‘first and foremost’ center on negotiations with Iran.

Leaders from 17 countries participated in the initial Gaza Board of Peace charter signing ceremony in Davos, Switzerland, in late January, including presidents and other senior government officials from Latin America, Europe, the Middle East, and Central and Southeast Asia.

Netanyahu was not present at the ceremony, where world leaders signed the founding charter alongside Trump, who was seated at the center of the stage.

His office, however, said he would accept Trump’s invitation to join the Peace Board, following earlier concerns he had raised about the makeup of the Gaza executive board, particularly the roles of Qatar and Turkey.

A handful of other countries were also invited by the White House to join, including Russia, Belarus, France, Germany, Vietnam, Finland, Ukraine, Ireland, Greece and China, among others. Poland and Italy on Wednesday said they would not join.

Netanyahu’s visit to Washington comes as the U.S. expands its military presence in the Middle East while talks with Iran remain ongoing.

Expert urges US officials to hold Iran ‘accountable’ amid peace talks in Oman

Trump has deployed the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group and the USS Michael Murphy, a guided-missile destroyer, as his envoys meet with Iranian officials in Oman.

Other U.S. naval assets, including the USS Bulkeley, USS Roosevelt, USS Delbert D. Black, USS McFaul, USS Mitscher, USS Spruance and USS Frank E. Petersen Jr., are positioned across key waterways surrounding Iran, from the eastern Mediterranean and Red Sea to the Persian Gulf, and Arabian Sea.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Senate Democrats aren’t budging on their Homeland Security demands, and appear ready to again thrust the government into a partial shutdown as Republicans scramble to keep the lights on.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., announced that he and Senate Democrats were prepared to reject a short-term funding extension, known as a continuing resolution (CR), for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) just days ahead of the funding deadline.

‘We’re 3 days away from a DHS shutdown, and Republicans have not gotten serious about negotiating a solution that reins in [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] and stops the violence,’ Schumer said on X. ‘Democrats will not support a CR to extend the status quo.’

Congress has until Friday at midnight to fund the agency, and as the days go by, the odds of doing so are becoming increasingly slim.

Schumer’s edict comes as both sides of the aisle continue negotiations behind the scenes on a compromise bill to fund the agency.

Senate Democrats unveiled the legislative text of their 10-point proposal over the weekend, and for a time, Republicans were optimistic that talks were moving in a positive direction.

Now, Schumer and his caucus are at an impasse with Republicans and the White House. While President Donald Trump and his administration presented a counteroffer earlier this week, Democrats say it’s not enough.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., teed up the original DHS funding bill for another vote on Tuesday. That bill could be modified to be a CR, and Republicans are leaning toward a four-week extension to keep the agency open.

And he noted that the legislative text from the White House could be coming on Wednesday.

‘There’s going to be the legislative text coming over from the White House today,’ Thune told reporters. ‘But I think it’s, like I said, the White House is operating in good faith.’

Still, Democrats have dubbed the GOP’s counter, which has been kept under strict lock and key, ‘sophomoric talking points.’ However, several items from their proposal, like requiring Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to obtain judicial warrants, demask, and have identification, are red lines for the White House and Republicans.

Whether the GOP can siphon off enough votes to avert a partial shutdown remains an open question, given the unified front Schumer and his caucus are presenting. And they will have a math problem of their own to contend with in trying to break the 60-vote filibuster.

Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., who was discharged from the hospital on Tuesday, ‘will be working from home this week,’ his office said in a statement.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Attorney General Pam Bondi said she received a criminal referral from the House Judiciary Committee alleging former CIA Director John Brennan lied to Congress, confirming the receipt during a hearing before the panel on Wednesday.

Bondi’s was responding to committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, who directly asked the attorney general if Brennan would be indicted. The DOJ has for months been investigating Brennan and several others over the origins of the 2016 Trump-Russia probe.

‘What I can confirm is that we have received a referral from you, Chairman Jordan, to investigate John Brennan,’ Bondi said.

‘His attorneys have made some public statements, but the department is still bound, of course, by our longstanding policy of not discussing matters,’ Bondi said. ‘What I will say today I can’t confirm nor deny whether there’s a pending investigation, but what I will say [is] that no one is above the law. Weaponization has ended.

Jordan’s referral to the DOJ, sent in October, centered on Brennan’s testimony about the Steele dossier, a salacious document containing unverified, negative claims about Trump, and its role in an Obama-era Intelligence Community Assessment on Russia’s efforts to interfere in the 2016 election.

The referral followed CIA Director John Ratcliffe also asking the DOJ to prosecute Brennan over broader conspiracy allegations.

A grand jury subpoenaed Brennan and former FBI officials Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, among others, as part of the DOJ’s investigation, Fox News Digital reported in November. The subpoenas originated from the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, leading Brennan’s lawyers to accuse the DOJ of forum shopping for Republican-friendly judges.

Rep. Dan Goldman, D-N.Y., chimed in after Bondi answered, alluding to comments Trump has made about targeting his pollical enemies.

‘If we want to know whether Mr. Brennan will be indicted, you should just ask the president,’ Goldman said.

Fox News asked Trump last summer about Brennan after reports first surfaced that the FBI was investigating him and several others involved in what Republicans have widely viewed as a politically motivated effort to undermine Trump’s 2016 election campaign and victory. Trump said at the time that ‘whatever happens, happens.’

‘I think they’re very dishonest people. I think they’re crooked as hell. And, maybe they have to pay a price for that,’ Trump said at the time.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Russia has reportedly agreed to abide by the limits of a nuclear arms pact it reached with the U.S. years ago after the agreement expired last week — as long as Washington does the same.

The New START Treaty’s expiration, which occurred on Feb. 5, leaves the nations with the two largest atomic arsenals with no restrictions for the first time in more than a half-century, The Associated Press reported. The expiration has fueled fears of a possible unconstrained nuclear arms race.

In September, President Vladimir Putin said Russia would abide by the nuclear arms deal for another year after its expiration date as long as the U.S. followed suit, the AP reported. However, President Donald Trump has said he wanted China to be part of a new pact, something that Beijing has rejected, according to the AP.

‘Rather than extend ‘NEW START’ (A badly negotiated deal by the United States that, aside from everything else, is being grossly violated), we should have our Nuclear Experts work on a new, improved, and modernized Treaty that can last long into the future,’ Trump wrote on Truth Social upon the treaty’s expiration.

In response to Fox News Digital’s request for comment on the now-expired treaty, the White House pointed to the president’s Truth Social post.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov spoke to lawmakers about the treaty, saying Moscow would ‘act in a responsible and balanced way on the basis of analysis of the U.S. military policies,’ the AP reported.

Lavrov added that ‘we have reason to believe that the United States is in no hurry to abandon these limits and that they will be observed for the foreseeable future.’

‘We will closely monitor how things are actually unfolding,’ Lavrov said. ‘If our American colleagues’ intention to maintain some kind of cooperation on this is confirmed, we will work actively on a new agreement and consider the issues that have remained outside strategic stability agreements.’

The New START Treaty was signed in 2010 by President Barack Obama and his Russian counterpart, Dmitry Medvedev, and was entered into force on Feb. 5, 2011. 

The treaty gave the U.S. and Russia until Feb. 5, 2018, to meet the central limits on strategic offensive arms. The treaty caps each side at 700 deployed ICBMs, SLBMs and nuclear-capable heavy bombers; 1,550 deployed warheads; and 800 deployed and non-deployed launchers and bombers. The parties were then obligated to maintain the limits as long as the treaty remained in force, which it did until last week.

The expiration of the treaty comes just after a meeting involving U.S. and Russian officials in Abu Dhabi. Axios previously reported that the two nations were closing in on a deal to observe the treaty for at least six months after its expiration. The outlet added that during the six-month period there would be negotiations for a new deal.

The State Department did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

I know this is going to shock you, but Detroit became the latest to shutter its doors to the college football postseason. 

I’m sure players are distraught at the thought of missing a few days in D-Town, in the dead of winter, to play in front of a couple thousand fans in an utterly meaningless bowl game.

Here’s a novel idea moving forward: Cut loose more struggling, straggling bowls, and make bowl season great again. 

That’s right, I said it. 

Ladies and gentlemen, we’ve reached the point where — I can’t believe I’m writing this — the idea any December ball is good ball is now a wild miscalculation. 

Most December bowl ball is unwatchable.

When you’re begging teams with losing records to play in bowl games that are nothing more than content for ESPN — and when some of those teams with losing records are turning down invitations — it may be time to start rethinking this process.

Detroit’s exit earlier this week followed game cancellations from the LA Bowl, and the Bahamas Bowl. A full-blown tragedy, I know. 

Northwestern played Central Michigan in December in the (insert sponsor) Detroit Bowl, and won 34-7. For those who pine for the pristine bowl age of days gone by, a Northwestern-Central Michigan game in September is called a body bag game. 

In other words, Northwestern is paying CMU to come to Evanston and take a whipping. But three months later, whoa, buddy, now we’re talking. 

Flat out electric. 

Can we cut to the chase here? If you’re watching Troy play Jacksonville State in the Salute To Veterans Bowl from Montgomery, Ala., on a random Tuesday in mid-December, you may have a problem.

Want a Salute to Veterans? Don’t make them watch that slop.

Or how about the 68 Ventures Bowl, where Louisiana and Delaware played to see who could reach seven wins first. I’m gonna venture to say no thanks.

There’s the Xbox Bowl and the Myrtle Beach Bowl. The Gasparilla and Boca Raton Bowl, and yep, something called the Scooter’s Coffee Frisco Bowl. 

And who could forget the Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl? Want to impress me, Doggfather?

Bring your pals Ricky, Bubbles and Julian to the joint, and make the trophy a replica sterling silver double wide. Way she goes, bud.

Seriously, it’s almost as though those running college football — for the 1,000th time, the presidents of the SEC and Big Ten — are giving the non-SEC and Big Ten schools a ball of yarn stuffed with catnip and calling it bowl season. 

There were 41 bowl games this season, everyone. Forty-flipping-one.

Let’s do some quick math, shall we? That’s 82 of the 136 FBS teams playing in the postseason, or 60%.  

The elite of college football haven’t separated from the pack as much as they’ve allowed bowl season to water down the postseason — and by proxy, the sport itself.

College football was once built and sustained on its irreplaceable regular season of every game matters. Now it doesn’t, but that doesn’t mean you reinforce that now huge blindspot by underscoring it in the postseason. 

The new CFP is the marquee product of college football, and shouldn’t be dragged down by five-win Mississippi State praying coach Jeff Lebby gets a bucket of mayo dumped on his noggin — and avoids an eighth loss. He didn’t, for the record.

Playing in a bowl game is a reward, not a right depending on how many random cities can convince donors to come up with enough cash to pay teams and keep the stadium lights on. 

You want a December to remember? Lop off 20 bowls, leave 16 (not including the CFP bowls) and watch how important those games become to programs trying to find a way to the elite of the game. 

Watch how important it makes November — the regular season — with teams vying for one of those spots.

Watch attendance increase, and television ratings jump and college football postseason popularity take off like it never has before. Watch cities compete for games, and get creative with financial packages ― and watch college football make even more money.

Watch something good come out of this hellish train wreck of the past five seasons of paradigm change in the sport. 

Make bowl season great again.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Rising talents in women’s college basketball like Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese and Paige Bueckers will officially make their debuts for the senior national team in games next month.

The trio of young WNBA stars were named to Team USA’s roster for a qualifying tournament for the 2026 FIBA Women’s World Cup in San Juan, Puerto Rico, from March 11-17.

Olympic gold medal winners Kahleah Copper, Chelsea Gray, Kelsey Plum and Jackie Young are on the roster. Veterans Dearica Hamby, Rhyne Howard and Aliyah Boston will also represent for the Americans.

In addition to Clark, Reese and Bueckers, other players making their senior national team debut include Sonia Citron and Kiki Iriafen.

Notably absent from the roster — which was selected by managing director Sue Bird — are Napheesa Collier, two-time MVP Breanna Stewart and reigning WNBA MVP A’ja Wilson. But it’s worth noting that the Americans are already qualified for the World Cup, which they accomplished when a Kara Lawson-coached group of college players won the AmeriCup last summer. So, the stakes for this qualifying tournament aren’t all that high.

Collier is recovering from surgery on her ankles, and Team USA says Stewart will join the squad for its pre-tournament training camp in Miami, Florida on March 7-8.

Team USA says head coach Kara Lawson will lead the team for part of the tournament because it collides with the start of the NCAA Tournament.

‘Lawson will return to Duke to prepare for the NCAA Tournament prior to the tournament ending, and an assistant coach will sit in the first chair for the remaining games,’ USA Basketball said in a press release.

Lawson’s Duke Blue Devils — now winners of 15 straight games and in first place in the ACC — will be in the thick of March Madness preparation. The ACC Tournament will end on March 8, Selection Sunday is March 15, and NCAA Tournament games will begin on March 20. Another Duke staffer, associate head coach Tia Jackson, will serve as a scout coach in San Juan.

On the court, Lawson will be assisted by a trio of WNBA head coaches in the Indiana Fever’s Stephanie White, Golden State Valkyries’ Natalie Nakase of Phoenix Mercury’s and Nate Tibbetts. Jose Fernandez, formerly the longtime coach at USF who is now the head coach of the Dallas Wings, will also serve as a scout coach.

The first of Team USA’s five games in Puerto Rico is March 11 vs. Senegal.

The FIBA Women’s World Cup begins on Sept. 4 in Berlin, Germany.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Mauricio Pochettino has revealed that he told Donald Trump the U.S. men’s national team can win the World Cup on home soil this summer.

The USMNT head coach and U.S. president crossed paths in December at the World Cup draw in Washington, D.C.

Pochettino recounted the meeting during an appearance on the High Performance Podcast.

‘At the draw of the World Cup, I met Donald Trump for a few minutes. He asked me: ‘What do you think, coach. Can you win the World Cup?’

“I said, ‘Of course, Mr. President.’ Because it’s the USA. The American dream is there. The American culture is about being first, being number one. When we accepted the challenge to go there it’s because we really believe that we can win. 

‘After a year and a half working there, people start to feel that we can win. The last few camps in October and November, we competed against very good teams and we started to show that possibility to perform well.’

He added: ‘We are going to have the support of a massive country and all its fans. To try and push us to run, score goals, and make tackles. I think that will be a massive boost for us.’

The USMNT had an excellent end to 2025, winning four of its last five matches including a 5-1 thrashing of Uruguay in its last game of the year.

Pochettino’s side has been drawn into Group D alongside Australia, Paraguay and a European team yet to be determined.

Should it advance, the U.S. would move onto the knockout stage where it would have to win five consecutive matches to take home the World Cup.

In its entire history, the USMNT has won just one World Cup knockout match.

Pochettino’s right-hand man, assistant coach Jesus Perez, also appeared on the podcast and said that the team lacked ‘basics’ when the pair took over in the fall of 2024.

‘We found that there was a lack of basics for whatever reason,’ Perez said. ‘They (the USMNT) were in a transition. 

‘What we did was assess things and implement our vision. We didn’t go there to teach anyone, to show them how to do things. Just to convince a group of players and staff that we can be competitive.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

How big was Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl 60 halftime show?

The ratings are out for Super Bowl 60 a few days after the big game concluded, and the numbers show that its halftime show was one of the most-watched of all time. Puerto Rican artist Bad Bunny’s performance drew more than 100 million live viewers to NBC to watch the show.

In the days since, more figures have dropped to show just how wide of an audience Bad Bunny reached with his halftime show performance, which also featured Lady Gaga and Ricky Martin.

Here’s a closer look at five wild stats that show just how popular Bad Bunny’s halftime show really was:

Buy Seahawks championship pages, gear

How many people watched Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show?

  • Halftime show views (U.S. only): 128.2 million average viewers

According to a press release from NBC, which owned the broadcast rights to Super Bowl 60, Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show averaged 128.2 million viewers between 8:15-8:30 p.m. ET in the United States.

That would make Bad Bunny’s performance the third-most-watched Super Bowl halftime show in history, trailing Kendrick Lamar’s performance at Super Bowl 59 (133.5 million viewers) and Michael Jackson’s Super Bowl 27 halftime show (133.4 million viewers).

Nielsen, the media audience measurement firm, is expected to have more detailed viewership metrics from a global audience later in the week.

How many YouTube views does Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show have?

  • Halftime show YouTube views: Over 69 million

As of 1 p.m. ET on Wednesday, Feb. 11, three days after Super Bowl 60, the official, NFL-uploaded YouTube video of Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show has more than 69 million views.

For comparison, the YouTube video of Lamar’s halftime show performance from last year reached 50 million views in a similar, 72-hour time frame in the days following Super Bowl 59.

To date, Usher’s performance from the Super Bowl 58 halftime show has 38.2 million views two years after his performance.

How many social views does Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show have?

  • Halftime show social views: Over 4 billion

NBC’s press release from the evening of Tuesday, Feb. 10 said that Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show generated more than four billion views on social media within the first 24 hours after the performance.

The broadcast network stated that meant the performance at Super Bowl 60 was ‘the most-consumed halftime show of all-time on NFL social platforms.’

How many people watched Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show press conference?

  • Halftime show press conference views: 63 million

An Apple press release on Sunday, Feb. 8 stated that Bad Bunny’s halftime show press conference, which he conducted on Feb. 5, ‘became the most watched in Super Bowl history with more than 63 million views across an array of related content, including the live stream and social clips.’

How many people watched Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show on Telemundo?

  • Telemundo halftime show ratings: 4.8 million average viewers

Telemundo, the Spanish-language broadcast network owned by NBCUniversal, averaged 4.8 million viewers during Bad Bunny’s halftime show, according to NBC’s press release. That numbers was 1.5 million average viewers higher than the big game itself, which averaged 3.3 million viewers on Telemundo.

NBC’s press release stated that the Telemundo halftime show ratings made the Puerto Rican artist’s Super Bowl 60 performance ‘the most-watched Super Bowl halftime in Spanish-language history.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Detroit Pistons centers Isaiah Stewart and Jalen Duren have been suspended for their roles in a brawl during a game against the Charlotte Hornets on Monday, Feb. 9.

Stewart’s suspension is for seven games, while Duren gets two games, the league announced Wednesday.

Hornets suspensions include Moussa Diabate (four games) and Miles Bridges (four games).

This marks the fifth time Stewart has been suspended during his six-year career.

The brawl began after Diabate was fouled by Duren with more than seven minutes remaining in the third quarter. The players exchanged words and then Duren shoved Diabate in the face. Bridges stepped in and shoved Duren before Diabate threw a punch at Duren and had to be held back by coaches and teammates, according to the Detroit Free Press, part of the USA TODAY Network.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY